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Anticancer Research

Effect of metabolic inhibitors, methylxanthines, antioxidants, alkali metals, and corn oil on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine carcinogenicity in rats.

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R Balansky
P Blagoeva
Z Mircheva
K Pozharisski
S de Flora

Keywords

Abstract

The effect of the oral administration of 10 compounds on 1,2-dimethylhydrazine (DMH) carcinogenesis was investigated in 180 male Wistar rats and 510 male BD6 rats. DMH, administered s.c. once per week for 20 consecutive weeks (20 mg/kg body wt/dose), produced intestinal (mainly colon) tumors of various histological type in 100% of both rat strains and, in addition, caused Zymbal gland carcinomas in 79.7% of Wistar rats. Pretreatment with disulfiram (DSF, 500 mg/kg), a known inhibitor of DMH metabolism, totally prevented intestinal and Zymbal gland tumors in Wistar rats. When DSF treatment started after the first DMH injection, the protective effect was not total, the incidence and multiplicity of both types of tumors being comparable to those observed following a single injection of the carcinogen alone. This confirms the involvement of DSF in the initiation stage only of DMH carcinogenesis. A complete prevention of intestinal tumors in BD6 rats was also produced not only by the DSF metabolite carbon disulfide (250 mg/kg) but also by the hepatotoxic agent carbon tetrachloride (1.5 ml/kg), which suggests that the block of DMH metabolism in rat liver is not an exclusive property of thiono-sulfur compounds. Butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT) decreased the multiplicity of intestinal tumors, but not to a significant extent. BHT and the aforementioned metabolic inhibitors were administered by gavage in corn oil, which per se did not significantly decrease intestinal or Zymbal gland tumors. All remaining modulators were administered with drinking water. Two additional antioxidants triggered opposite effects on the multiplicity of intestinal tumors. In fact, sodium selenite (10 mg/l) significantly decreased the number of tumors, whereas ascorbic acid (10 g/l), irrespective of its combination with CaCl2, produced a marked enhancement. The alkali metal salts CaCl2 and KCl (both at 5 g/l) as well as the methylxanthines caffeine and theophylline (both at 600 mg/l) were devoid of significant effects. Neither treatment with DMH alone nor its association with test modulators was accompanied by significant changes in body weight gain or survival of animals. On the whole, depending on the mechanisms involved, the comparative study of test compounds led to a broad array of effects on DMH carcinogenesis, ranging from complete inhibition to significant enhancement. The resulting picture can be visualized at a glance in Figure 1 of this article.

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